Commentary - The Latin Library
... to supplant Roman influence in Illyria and along the Adriatic coast. He entered into an alliance with Hannibal in 215 BC, which had little influence on the war, other than drawing a Roman army down on Greece (The First Macedonian War) when Philipʻs envoys were captured by the Romans. 41 deleō, -ēre, ...
... to supplant Roman influence in Illyria and along the Adriatic coast. He entered into an alliance with Hannibal in 215 BC, which had little influence on the war, other than drawing a Roman army down on Greece (The First Macedonian War) when Philipʻs envoys were captured by the Romans. 41 deleō, -ēre, ...
Hannibal - Mr. Weiss - Honors World History
... troops to spread out and encircle the enemy. Once the trap was set, the onslaught could begin. On August 2, 216 B.C., the two sides met in Cannae. Just as Hannibal had predicted, the Romans marched forward and went straight into his trap! After days of killing, nearly 50,000 Romans died. It was the ...
... troops to spread out and encircle the enemy. Once the trap was set, the onslaught could begin. On August 2, 216 B.C., the two sides met in Cannae. Just as Hannibal had predicted, the Romans marched forward and went straight into his trap! After days of killing, nearly 50,000 Romans died. It was the ...
P. S. DEROW
... few places where minor correction is desirable. More surprisingly, these texts—rather this text in its two parts—have not been much considered in discussions of Illyria and Rome over these three decades.3 It is imperative to do this, for at least one substantial conclusion must emerge: that Pharos h ...
... few places where minor correction is desirable. More surprisingly, these texts—rather this text in its two parts—have not been much considered in discussions of Illyria and Rome over these three decades.3 It is imperative to do this, for at least one substantial conclusion must emerge: that Pharos h ...
Citizenship Identity and Imperial Control Roman
... A background on the classes of Roman citizenship during the Republic is essential to understand just what it was that the Allies were aspiring to. First and foremost were of course full Roman citizens, who had all of the rights and protections afforded by the Senate and People of Rome. Among these r ...
... A background on the classes of Roman citizenship during the Republic is essential to understand just what it was that the Allies were aspiring to. First and foremost were of course full Roman citizens, who had all of the rights and protections afforded by the Senate and People of Rome. Among these r ...
rome`s i)eclaration of war on carthage in 218 bc 1
... invade Africa that year: he may weil have made ostentatious preparations (41,3) in Sicily in order tO hold Carthaginiaß attention and, with the fate of Regulus' expedition tO suggest caution, he may deliberately have postponed thought of a full-scale attack on Africa undl the next year when It would ...
... invade Africa that year: he may weil have made ostentatious preparations (41,3) in Sicily in order tO hold Carthaginiaß attention and, with the fate of Regulus' expedition tO suggest caution, he may deliberately have postponed thought of a full-scale attack on Africa undl the next year when It would ...
camillus - latinata
... Camillus was summoned to appear in the people's court to answer the charge made against him. But he would not humble himself so much as to go before the plebeians to be tried. He preferred rather to leave Rome forever. So the great Camillus departed from his native city, intending never to return. A ...
... Camillus was summoned to appear in the people's court to answer the charge made against him. But he would not humble himself so much as to go before the plebeians to be tried. He preferred rather to leave Rome forever. So the great Camillus departed from his native city, intending never to return. A ...
Hannibal
... Cumae and Puteoli -necessary to receive fresh troops- failed. In the end, this would seal his fate. Hannibal realized the problem and decided that he had to abandon his offensives in central Italy. He had been in Italy for almost four years, and his army still needed reinforcements. Therefore, he tu ...
... Cumae and Puteoli -necessary to receive fresh troops- failed. In the end, this would seal his fate. Hannibal realized the problem and decided that he had to abandon his offensives in central Italy. He had been in Italy for almost four years, and his army still needed reinforcements. Therefore, he tu ...
PUNIC WARS First Punic War (264-241 BC): The Romans ______
... to attack cities on southern Italy, stealing food to supply his army. In 216 BC in the battle of Cannae Hannibal defeated a Roman army led by two consuls and killed them. More than 40.000 Romans died that day. But Hannibal didn't march on Rome. Then, Roman Senate decided to send an army to Spai, th ...
... to attack cities on southern Italy, stealing food to supply his army. In 216 BC in the battle of Cannae Hannibal defeated a Roman army led by two consuls and killed them. More than 40.000 Romans died that day. But Hannibal didn't march on Rome. Then, Roman Senate decided to send an army to Spai, th ...
wotr-ch-15-16 - WordPress.com
... safe. […] A consul and his army had been lost at Trasimene the year before, and now it was not a case of the blow being followed by another blow, but by a disaster many times greater.” (AUC 22.54.7-9) ...
... safe. […] A consul and his army had been lost at Trasimene the year before, and now it was not a case of the blow being followed by another blow, but by a disaster many times greater.” (AUC 22.54.7-9) ...
Roman (Un)exceptionalism: Dispelling Popular Notions of
... Samnite practice of installing a single commander to manage the armies, doing so by appointing a dictator.14 At the behest of Rome, the Latin League began a similar practice, and it was not uncommon for non-Romans to take the lead.15 The emphasis was placed on a leader’s ability to win a battle and ...
... Samnite practice of installing a single commander to manage the armies, doing so by appointing a dictator.14 At the behest of Rome, the Latin League began a similar practice, and it was not uncommon for non-Romans to take the lead.15 The emphasis was placed on a leader’s ability to win a battle and ...
Hannibal
... Carthaginian general, leader of the famous march across the Alps. Hannibal is primarily known for his efforts in the second Punic war, but was just as important in the role he played in the conquest of southeastern Spain in the 220s BCE. Hannibal was the son of Hamilcar Barca, and started following ...
... Carthaginian general, leader of the famous march across the Alps. Hannibal is primarily known for his efforts in the second Punic war, but was just as important in the role he played in the conquest of southeastern Spain in the 220s BCE. Hannibal was the son of Hamilcar Barca, and started following ...
08. The Punic Wars
... How Hannibal got into Italy is part of the drama of his persona. On a long march Hannibal crossed the Pyrenees Mountains out of Spain with about 25,000 men and about a dozen war elephants. Boldly, he cut off communication with Carthage and lived off the land for the five-month journey to the Italian ...
... How Hannibal got into Italy is part of the drama of his persona. On a long march Hannibal crossed the Pyrenees Mountains out of Spain with about 25,000 men and about a dozen war elephants. Boldly, he cut off communication with Carthage and lived off the land for the five-month journey to the Italian ...
Untitled
... its novelty in a sense of lacking the Roman character but rather its bloodiness. The human sacrifices were undoubtedly made before and Livy writes about it. He claims that the sacrificed wretches were buried in 216 on Forum Boarium, in the place soaked with human blood and closed with a rock30. It i ...
... its novelty in a sense of lacking the Roman character but rather its bloodiness. The human sacrifices were undoubtedly made before and Livy writes about it. He claims that the sacrificed wretches were buried in 216 on Forum Boarium, in the place soaked with human blood and closed with a rock30. It i ...
Punic Wars Poster Activity The Punic Wars were a series of three
... unwillingness to reinforce him when victory was near could lead to defeat in the Second Punic War. Nevertheless, he obeyed the order and sailed for home. When he reached Carthage, Hannibal began preparing for Scipio’s attack. The Carthaginians and Romans went to battle at Zama. At first the Carthagi ...
... unwillingness to reinforce him when victory was near could lead to defeat in the Second Punic War. Nevertheless, he obeyed the order and sailed for home. When he reached Carthage, Hannibal began preparing for Scipio’s attack. The Carthaginians and Romans went to battle at Zama. At first the Carthagi ...
THE ORIGIN OF THE ROMAN DICTATORSHIP: AN OVERLOOKED
... The views of A.Rosenberg l l) are not as easily c1assified as often c1aimed. Yet he certainly fits basically the Latin stream. Although reacting strongly against Mommsen, he did not see Rome as just an ordinary Latin state. He accepted the evidence for the Latin dictatorship, but was impressed by th ...
... The views of A.Rosenberg l l) are not as easily c1assified as often c1aimed. Yet he certainly fits basically the Latin stream. Although reacting strongly against Mommsen, he did not see Rome as just an ordinary Latin state. He accepted the evidence for the Latin dictatorship, but was impressed by th ...
Chapter Six - The Roman Republic
... helped by his friends and kinsmen among the Etruscan chiefs. You must have heard of at least one story concerning that struggle, how Horatius and his two friends defended the wooden bridge over the Tiber, the only one in those days, against the royalist invaders suddenly pouring down from the Janicu ...
... helped by his friends and kinsmen among the Etruscan chiefs. You must have heard of at least one story concerning that struggle, how Horatius and his two friends defended the wooden bridge over the Tiber, the only one in those days, against the royalist invaders suddenly pouring down from the Janicu ...
Reading: Hannibal of Carthage #23
... In this battle, thousands of Romans were killed and many others drowned in a nearby lake. An additional 4,000 Roman cavalrymen who approached the battlefield were also destroyed. It was one of proud Rome's worst defeats ever. About a year later, Hannibal's troops and cavalry captured the huge Roman ...
... In this battle, thousands of Romans were killed and many others drowned in a nearby lake. An additional 4,000 Roman cavalrymen who approached the battlefield were also destroyed. It was one of proud Rome's worst defeats ever. About a year later, Hannibal's troops and cavalry captured the huge Roman ...
No Slide Title
... It was said that at the Battle of Zama… “ The Romans were hindered by the quantity of slippery corpses which were still soaked in blood and had fallen in heaps and the number of arms thrown away haphazard.” C) Following Carthage ’s defeat at Zama , Hannibal himself advised Carthage to establish a p ...
... It was said that at the Battle of Zama… “ The Romans were hindered by the quantity of slippery corpses which were still soaked in blood and had fallen in heaps and the number of arms thrown away haphazard.” C) Following Carthage ’s defeat at Zama , Hannibal himself advised Carthage to establish a p ...
Introduction - Beck-Shop
... cases unique circumstances that shaped the decision of each city to remain loyal to Rome or to ally with Hannibal. What emerges is a picture of individual self-interested communities responding to the immediate internal and external pressures brought on by a changing military, diplomatic and politic ...
... cases unique circumstances that shaped the decision of each city to remain loyal to Rome or to ally with Hannibal. What emerges is a picture of individual self-interested communities responding to the immediate internal and external pressures brought on by a changing military, diplomatic and politic ...
YEAR 4: THE PUNIC WARS (5 lessons)
... Lesson 4. The end of the Punic Wars Carthage was soundly defeated at the end of the Second Punic War, and lost all of its overseas territories to the Romans. Hannibal survived, but was later exiled from Carthage. He continued to fight for Rome’s other enemies around Europe, but died in 183 AD when ...
... Lesson 4. The end of the Punic Wars Carthage was soundly defeated at the end of the Second Punic War, and lost all of its overseas territories to the Romans. Hannibal survived, but was later exiled from Carthage. He continued to fight for Rome’s other enemies around Europe, but died in 183 AD when ...
Section Two: Africa`s Carthage
... Fabius’ strategy, however, bothered the Senate. “Romans should not avoid battle,” they argued. “It had been a year since the battle of Lake Trasimene, Hannibal is weak, and we have rebuilt our army. It is now time to face Hannibal.” Fabius objected. “Hannibal has already a third of his army left,” h ...
... Fabius’ strategy, however, bothered the Senate. “Romans should not avoid battle,” they argued. “It had been a year since the battle of Lake Trasimene, Hannibal is weak, and we have rebuilt our army. It is now time to face Hannibal.” Fabius objected. “Hannibal has already a third of his army left,” h ...
the roman republic - Assets - Cambridge
... own times; and Livy unfortunately based his account on these writers rather than on the original evidence. Most scholars now agree that as a result of this process the details of Livy’s political and military narrative are unreliable, amounting to reconstruction or plausible invention by Livy himsel ...
... own times; and Livy unfortunately based his account on these writers rather than on the original evidence. Most scholars now agree that as a result of this process the details of Livy’s political and military narrative are unreliable, amounting to reconstruction or plausible invention by Livy himsel ...
Part 12
... a) the serious set-back Rome experienced at Cannae, b) the Roman loss also of a consular army to the Gauls in the north of Italy in 216 BC, c) Hannibal’s new alliances, and d) the change of allegiance to Hannibal of quite a number of Rome’s allies in Italy after Cannae (although not the Greek city s ...
... a) the serious set-back Rome experienced at Cannae, b) the Roman loss also of a consular army to the Gauls in the north of Italy in 216 BC, c) Hannibal’s new alliances, and d) the change of allegiance to Hannibal of quite a number of Rome’s allies in Italy after Cannae (although not the Greek city s ...
Socii
The socii (/ˈsoʊʃiaɪ/ in English; ""allies"") were the autonomous tribes and city-states of the Italian Peninsula in permanent military alliance with the Roman Republic until the Social War of 91–88 BC. After this conflict, all Rome's peninsular Italian allies were awarded Roman citizenship and their territories incorporated in the Roman state. The Romans themselves referred to their confederates as the socii Latini (""Latin allies""), although most were not members of the Latin tribe strictly speaking, but members of various other Italian tribes and city-states. In everyday usage, the word socius /ˈsoʊʃəs/ could mean ""associate"" or ""partner"" in general.The alliance had its origin in the foedus Cassianum (""Treaty of Cassius"", 493 BC) signed by the fledgling Roman republic with its neighbouring Latin city-states shortly after the overthrow of the Roman monarchy in 510 BC. This provided for mutual defence by the two parties on the basis of an equal contribution to the annual military levy, which was probably under Roman overall command. The terms of the treaty were probably more acceptable to the Latins than the previous type of Roman hegemony, that of the Tarquin kings, as the latter had probably required the payment of tribute and not a simple military obligation.The foedus served as the basic template for Rome's settlement with the large array of tribes and city-states of the whole Italian peninsula that it subjugated during the period 338–264 BC. At the start of this period, the original Latins were mostly granted Roman citizenship. But the terms of the foedus was extended to about 150 other tribes and city-states. When a state was defeated, a part of its territory would be annexed by Rome to provide land for Roman/Latin colonists. The latter, although Roman citizens, were required to give up their citizen rights on joining a colony, and accept the status of socii. This was in order that Latin colonies could act as ""watchdogs"" on the other socii in the allied military formations, the alae. The defeated state would be allowed to keep the rest of its territory in return for binding itself to Rome with a perpetual treaty of military alliance. This would require the ally to ""have the same friends and enemies as Rome"", effectively prohibiting war against other socii and surrendering foreign policy to Rome. Beyond this, the central, and in most cases sole, obligation on the ally to contribute to the confederate army, on demand, a number of fully equipped troops up to a specified maximum each year, to serve under Roman command.The Roman military alliance had fully evolved by 264 BC and remained for 200 years the basis of Roman military organisation. From 338 BC to 88 BC, Roman legions were invariably accompanied on campaign by roughly the same numbers of allied troops organised into two units called alae (literally: ""wings"", as allied troops would always be posted on the flanks of the Roman battle-line, with the Roman legions holding the centre). 75% of a normal consular army's cavalry was supplied by the Italian socii. Although the socii provided around half the levies raised by Rome in any given year, they had no say in how those troops were used. Foreign policy and war were matters exclusively in the hands of the Roman Consuls and the Roman Senate. The latter, in turn, was a narrow, self-perpetuating 300-strong clique of wealthy men who monopolised power in the Roman republic, despite the theoretical sovereignty of the Roman people.Despite the loss of independence and heavy military obligations, the system provided substantial benefits for the socii. Most importantly, they were freed from the constant threat of aggression from their neighbours that had existed in the anarchic centuries prior to the imposition of the pax Romana. In addition, the Roman alliance protected the Italian peninsula from external invasion, such as the periodic and devastating incursions of Gauls from the Po Valley. Although no longer in control of war and foreign policy, each socius remained otherwise fully autonomous, with its own laws, system of government, coinage and language. Moreover, the military burden was only half that shouldered by Roman citizens, as the latter numbered only about half the population of the socii, but provided around half the total levies. Despite this, allied troops were allowed to share war booty on a 50–50 basis with Romans.Despite these benefits, many socii rebelled against the alliance whenever the opportunity arose. The best opportunities were provided by the invasions of Italy by the Greek king Pyrrhus in 281–75 BC and by the Carthaginian general Hannibal in 218–03 BC. During these, many socii joined the invaders, mostly Oscan-speakers of southern Italy, most prominently the Samnite tribes, who were Rome's most implacable enemy. At the same time, however, many socii remained loyal, motivated primarily by antagonisms with neighbouring rebels. Even after Rome's disaster at the Battle of Cannae (216 BC), over half the socii (by population) did not defect and Rome's military alliance was ultimately victorious.In the century succeeding Hannibal's War (201–91 BC), Italy was no longer threatened by external invasion (save by the occasional Gallic or Germanic horde) and Rome and her allies embarked on aggressive expansion overseas, in Spain, Africa and the Balkans. Despite the fact that the alliance was no longer acting defensively, there was virtually no protest from the socii, most likely because the latter benefited equally in the enormous amounts of war booty yielded by these campaigns.But, beneath the surface, resentment was building among the socii about their second-class status as peregrini i.e. non-citizens (except for the Latin colonists, who could regain their citizenship by moving to Roman territory). The Roman military confederation now became a victim of its own success in forging a united nation out of the patchwork of ethnicities and states. The socii rebelled en masse, including many that had remained steadfast in the past, launching the so-called Social War. But, unlike on previous occasions, their aim was to join the Roman state as equal citizens, not to secede from it. Although the socii were defeated on the battlefield, they gained their main demand. By the end of the war in 88 BC, all inhabitants of peninsular Italy had been granted the right to apply for Roman citizenship.